Eg when the destination is logged as containing a file, skip
actively checking that it does contain it.
Note that --fast does not prevent other verifications of content
location that are done in a copy --from --to. Perhaps it could, but this
change will already avoid the real unnecessary work of operating on
files that are already in the remote.
And avoiding other verifications
might cause it to fail if the location log thinks that --to does not
contain the content but does. Such complications with `git-annex copy
--to remote --fast` led to commit d006586cd0
which added a note that gets displayed when that fails, mentioning it
might be due to --fast being enabled.
copy --from --to is already complicated enough without needing to worry
about such edge cases, so continuing to doing some verification of
content location after the initial --fast filtering seems ok.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
The gnuplot output is pretty good, but could still be improved with:
* more colors (repeating colors is confusing with a lot of repos)
* better positioning of the legend, making the plot wider and moving it
from over top of the graph
Sponsored-by: Kevin Mueller on Patreon
Only counting received and not dropped makes this show the bandwidth of
data coming into the repository, although only in a sense. Since
git-annex branch updates only happen at the end of a command, and we
don't know when a command started, it's only an approximation of the
actual bandwidth. (A previous git-annex branch update made have
happened in a different repository.)
It would be possible to also add a --dropped option, but I don't know
how useful that would be?
Sponsored-by: Nicholas Golder-Manning on Patreon
CSV format so it can be fed into a program to graph it.
Note that dead repositories are not yet handled so their sizes show as
nonzero after they are marked dead.
Sponsored-By: k0ld on Patreon
This can take a lot of memory. I decided to violate the usual rule in
git-annex that it operate in constant memory no matter how many annexed
objects. In this case, it would be hard to be fast without using a big
map of the location logs. The main difficulty here is that there can be
many git-annex branches and it needs to display a consistent view at a
point in time, which means merging information from multiple git-annex
branches.
I have not checked if there are any laziness leaks in this code. It
takes 1 gb to run in my big repo, which is around what I estimated
before writing it.
2 options that are documented are not yet implemented.
Small bug: With eg --when=1h, it will display at 12:00 then 1:10 if the
next change after 12:59 is then. Then it waits until after 2:10 to
display the next change. It ought to wait until after 2:00.
Sponsored-by: Brock Spratlen on Patreon